Abstract

Interactive health literacy (HL) skills enable individuals to participate more fully in healthcare activities and play a role in improving their outcomes. We examine the associations between HL and cystic fibrosis (CF) outcomes and compare HL in a sample from both the Irish CF and general populations. A total of251 CF Registry participants aged 13-30 years completed the HLS-EU-Q16 survey and a disease-specific instrument for measuring quality of life (QoL) in CF. Health outcome and healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) data were sourced from the registry. CF patient outcomes were examined using generalized linear models (GLMs) with interactive HL categorization included as a factor. General population interactive HL data are from the 2011 European HL Survey (HLS-EU). Interactive HL in 180 age-sex matched CF and general population individuals was examined using a GLM with study population, sex and educational level included as factors and age as a covariate. Sufficient interactive HL (total sum score ≥13) was self-reported by 81.7% of individuals with CF. Sufficient HL was associated with fewer outpatient visits [7.02(SD = 6.7: 7.4) vs. 8.74(SD = 7.9: 9.6), P < 0.001], days hospitalized [10.25(SD = 9.8: 10.7) vs. 12.8(SD = 11.8: 13.9), P < 0.001], days on intravenous antibiotics [15.3(SD = 14.7: 15.8) vs. 19.7(18.5: 21.1), P < 0.001], days on oral antibiotics [27.4(SD = 26.7: 28.1) vs. 48.48(38.7: 42.4), P < 0.001] and better QoL [77.1(SD = 75.4-78.9) vs. 64.6(60.8-68.3), P < 0.001]. Mean HL scores in CF and general populations were sufficient, although higher among individuals with CF (14.3 vs. 13.1, P < 0.01). CF adolescents and young adults with sufficient levels of HL to obtain, understand, appraise and apply health information have better health-related outcomes.

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